10 mobile form design best practices

Whether you’re sending a survey to your employees, collecting t-shirt sizes for your kid’s soccer team, buying a plane ticket, or collecting safety data on an active construction site, all of these activities start with a form.

Creating intuitive mobile forms is different from designing forms meant for people to fill out on their desktop or laptop. In this post, we’re going to share 10 mobile form design best practices.

Here are 10 best practices while you design a mobile form

Start with your goal or ideal outcome

Keep it simple

Make sure your form loads quickly

Use only single-input fields

Leverage built-in conditional logic to reduce friction

Use built-in smartphone GPS and camera functionality

Don’t rely on colors for calls to action

Make sure your form is easy to navigate by touch

Integrate with Siri and Google Assistant

Explain why you need sensitive information

Start with your goal or ideal outcome

It’s helpful to identify your goal before you build your form. That way, you can work backward and collect only the information you need. This reduces friction and form field bloat.

Keep it simple

The more minimal, easy to fill out, and concise your form is, the more likely people will be to complete it. Here are some tips to keep your form simple:

Ask only the essential questions.

Make sure the questions flow in a natural progression.

Use a single-column layout for easy readability.

If you have more than six to eight questions, consider breaking the form into sections and using a progress bar to let users know how far along they are in the process.

Make sure your form loads quickly

One of the fastest ways to ensure people don’t fill out your form is if it takes more than a few seconds to load. You should assume that most people are viewing your form on their phone in their in-between time.

At minimum, this means removing popups, banners, and large images on your mobile forms.

Use only single-input fields

Single-input form fields make it easy for someone to quickly fill out your form on a smaller keyboard and screen without having to pinch and zoom. Multi-input fields, such as splitting up first and last name into two fields; dropdowns; and radio buttons can be clunky to navigate on a smaller screen.

Plus, multi-input address fields can be downright confusing if you have a global audience. Places like South Korea and Japan have different address formats than the U.S. and Canada.

Leverage built-in conditional logic to reduce friction

Another way to reduce friction on your mobile form is to enable smart, auto-filled defaults and use conditional logic, which automatically changes up questions based on responses. This guides people to complete the form with a minimal amount of typing.

Use built-in smartphone GPS and camera functionality

For example, if you’re collecting payments, you can automatically add a customer’s shipping address zip code based on the GPS coordinates on their form. This is one less field for a customer to fill out.

Don’t rely on colors for calls to action

In fact, from an accessibility perspective, it’s better to design your form in high-contrast mode.

Make sure your form is easy to navigate by touch

To ensure your form is easy to navigate and to avoid “fat finger” errors (such as pressing the wrong button or multiple buttons by mistake), keep in mind the size of the average adult finger pad, which is about 9 mm wide, or roughly 48 pixels.

Explain why you need sensitive information

If you need to collect sensitive data, such as phone numbers, credit card details, or social security numbers, make sure to let users know what you’re planning on doing with this information.You should also make sure your mobile form looks trustworthy, reputable, and has proper security seals.

Mobile forms are becoming increasingly common. These 10 design best practices can help you build better forms.

If you’re looking for an easy way to build mobile forms and collect responses on the go whether you’re on a soccer field in suburban Ohio or the middle of the Sahara desert, try out the all-new JotForm Mobile Forms.

Annabel is a Marketing Communications Manager at JotForm. She’s passionate about writing and has worked in communications roles domestically and internationally. When she’s not blogging about SaaS or online forms, she enjoys international travel, loud concerts, and artisan coffee. You can reach Annabel through her contact form.